The Indian stock market bled heavily on Thursday, October 30, 2025, with Sensex plunging 592.67 points (0.70%) to close at 84,404.46 and Nifty50 dropping 176.05 points (0.68%) to 25,877.75. Despite the US Federal Reserve’s expected 25 bps rate cut, investor caution dominated as Fed Chair Jerome Powell hinted at a pause in easing, foreign outflows intensified, and global eyes turned to the high-stakes Trump-Xi meeting.
Mid-session, Sensex was down 590+ points at 84,406.56, while Nifty hovered near 25,875. Broader markets showed resilience—Nifty MidCap 100 up 0.1%, but Nifty SmallCap 100 slipped 0.1%. Analysts warn of increased volatility ahead.
The US Federal Reserve delivered a widely anticipated 25 basis point rate cut overnight, bringing the federal funds rate to 4.50–4.75%. However, Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a dovish-yet-cautious tone, emphasizing limited fresh data due to the ongoing US government shutdown and signaling no guarantee of a December cut.
“While the Fed is easing, it is doing so with caution,” said Ross Maxwell, Global Strategy Lead at VT Markets. “Powell’s remarks on differing views within the FOMC and rising employment risks pushed bond yields higher and equities lower.” The 10-year US Treasury yield jumped to 4.35%, pressuring rate-sensitive sectors globally.
The Fed also flagged persistent inflationary pressures in services and housing, dimming hopes for aggressive easing. This hawkish pause narrative triggered a risk-off sentiment, rippling into Asian and Indian markets.
All eyes are on the upcoming Trump-Xi meeting, expected to address escalating US-China trade tensions. With President Trump pushing for 60% tariffs on Chinese imports and China retaliating with rare-earth export curbs, markets fear a new trade war.
Indian IT, pharma, and auto ancillary stocks—highly exposed to US and Chinese supply chains—faced sharp selling. HCL Tech, Infosys, and Tata Motors were among top Nifty losers, down 1.5–2.8%.
Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) continued their exodus, selling ₹3,214 crore worth of Indian equities on October 29 (provisional). This marks the 7th consecutive session of outflows, totaling over ₹22,000 crore in the past week.
Rising US bond yields and a strengthening dollar index (DXY) at 104.8 made emerging markets less attractive. DIIs (Domestic Institutional Investors) absorbed some selling, buying ₹2,890 crore, but couldn’t prevent the slide.
All major sectoral indices ended in red except Nifty FMCG (+0.3%). Top losers:
Wall Street closed mixed post-Fed:
Nvidia became the first $5 trillion company, up 2.1%, boosting tech sentiment. However, Apple, Microsoft dipped on rate uncertainty.
Asian markets:
Rupak De, Senior Technical Analyst at LKP Securities, remains bullish long-term but cautions:
“Nifty has strong support at 25,850 (50-DMA). A decisive breach could lead to consolidation toward 25,500–25,300. On the upside, resistance lies at 26,100. A sustained move above opens path to 26,300–26,500.”
RSI (14) on daily chart at 58—neutral, not overbought. Put-Call Ratio at 0.92 signals mild bearish bias.
Top Gainers:
Top Losers:
The Indian Rupee weakened to 84.92/USD (down 12 paise). Crude oil (Brent) rose to $74.80/barrel on OPEC+ output cut talks. Gold hit ₹83,200/10g—safe-haven buying amid uncertainty.
Upcoming triggers:
Long-term investors may consider accumulating quality large-caps in IT, FMCG, and pharma on weakness. Short-term traders should wait for Nifty to reclaim 26,100 before going long.
“Volatility will remain elevated until Trump-Xi clarity emerges,” says a Mumbai-based fund manager. “Focus on defensive sectors and cash preservation.”
Today’s Sensex Nifty fall reflects global caution, not domestic weakness. With festive season demand picking up and Q2 earnings largely in line, the correction may be short-lived—unless trade tensions escalate.
Stay invested, stay alert. The market rewards patience.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!